Because I’ve
learned that I’m in the land of Cornish pasties, I decided to try making
some. I started looking online for a
basic, traditional recipe, and was stumped to see several of them starting off
with:
“1 Swede, chopped”.
What could
this possibly mean?
I’ve been
soaking up Scandinavian history ever since I entered Minnesota (Norwegians),
then a friend persuaded me to start taking Swedish language lessons online
(Duolingo), and then I discovered Finns on the U.P. I know that Norwegians & Finns were
suffering economic hardships that pushed them to emigrate, and that they
resented their more prosperous Swedish neighbors. But nothing I ever read hinted at cannibalism
there. And these pasties are Cornish,
after all.
After some
research, I learned that a “swede” is a rutabaga, since it was originally a
Swedish turnip. In old Swedish it was a “rotabagge”, from rot (root) + bagge
(short, stumpy object; probably related to bag). When the root vegetable was introduced to the
English, they refused to adopt its Swedish name, and instead called it a
“Swedish turnip”, then shortened that to “swede”. The Scots also shortened “turnip” to
“neep”. When Scandinavians immigrated to
the Upper Midwest, however, they brought with them the older term, so that in
North America this vegetable is called “rutabaga”.
I’ve always
been interested in root vegetables, but haven’t eaten them very much, so this
would be a good chance to experiment.
The recipes called for only 1 rutabaga & 2 potatoes, so the flavor
of the swede wasn’t likely to overwhelm the other ingredients. I went to the local roadside produce market
to find the perfect swede to chop up.
Two
potatoes, a rutabaga, and an onion produced an enormous bowlful of chopped
cubes! Exhausted & panicky, I ran
out to buy more meat & pie crust pastry.
I threw over any concerns about an authentic balance of meat & roots,
since I wanted them to look like the restaurant-made specimens I had seen
online. So now my mixing bowl was
overflowing with ingredients, and I started constructing pasties.
The
recommended size I found for a circle of pasty pastry was “a dinner plate”. This is roughly the same as a pie crust circle,
but I thought that the half-circle pasty that it produced would be unwieldy for
a handheld entrée. I cut each pie crust
in half, then rolled it into a slightly rounder shape and cut off the sharper
points. Spoon the filling onto half of
it, brush the edges with egg, fold over.
The crimping/folding/rolling process felt very natural in my hands, and
turned out well!
homemade pasties |
Pierce the
tops with a fork, brush with egg, bake.
Beautiful!
After making
8 of these pasties (and one more scrappy one from the cut-off pointy bits of
pastry) I still had more than enough filling for a 9-inch pie. And not enough energy to do more pasty
construction. One more trip to the
grocery store, fill the crust & cover, crimp & bake. Definitely not enough energy left over for
kitchen cleanup!
The pasties
& the pie were delicious hot out of the oven. Pasties are such fun to eat!
Recommended: black pepper |
I’m left
wondering about seasonings. All of the
recipes said “salt & pepper to taste”.
I know that modern American tastes enjoy much more salt & pepper
than was traditional. (Some
recipes said lightly peppered & some said highly peppered.) I tried to season
the pasties moderately. Some recipes
called for “a dash of nutmeg”. Within
this massive mound of filling, a ¼ teaspoon of nutmeg got lost.
Many miners liked to eat pasties for lunch. It was a meal in a handy holder.
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